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What artificial grammar learning reveals about the neurobiology of syntax

dc.contributor.authorKarl Magnus Petersson
dc.contributor.authorFolia, Vasiliki
dc.contributor.authorHagoort, Peter
dc.date.accessioned2018-12-07T14:52:58Z
dc.date.available2018-12-07T14:52:58Z
dc.date.issued2012-02
dc.description.abstractIn this paper we examine the neurobiological correlates of syntax, the processing of structured sequences, by comparing FMRI results on artificial and natural language syntax. We discuss these and similar findings in the context of formal language and computability theory. We used a simple right-linear unification grammar in an implicit artificial grammar learning paradigm in 32 healthy Dutch university students (natural language FMRI data were already acquired for these participants). We predicted that artificial syntax processing would engage the left inferior frontal region (BA 44/45) and that this activation would overlap with syntax-related variability observed in the natural language experiment. The main findings of this study show that the left inferior frontal region centered on BA 44/45 is active during artificial syntax processing of well-formed (grammatical) sequence independent of local subsequence familiarity. The same region is engaged to a greater extent when a syntactic violation is present and structural unification becomes difficult or impossible. The effects related to artificial syntax in the left inferior frontal region (BA 44/45) were essentially identical when we masked these with activity related to natural syntax in the same subjects. Finally, the medial temporal lobe was deactivated during this operation, consistent with the view that implicit processing does not rely on declarative memory mechanisms that engage the medial temporal lobe. In the context of recent FMRI findings, we raise the question whether Broca's region (or subregions) is specifically related to syntactic movement operations or the processing of hierarchically nested non-adjacent dependencies in the discussion section. We conclude that this is not the case. Instead, we argue that the left inferior frontal region is a generic on-line sequence processor that unifies information from various sources in an incremental and recursive manner, independent of whether there are any processing requirements related to syntactic movement or hierarchically nested structures. In addition, we argue that the Chomsky hierarchy is not directly relevant for neurobiological systems. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
dc.description.sponsorshipMax Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics; Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour; FCT; LA; FEDER/POCI; Vetenskapsradet [8276]; Hedlunds Stiftelse; Stockholm County Council (ALF, FoUU)
dc.description.versioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.bandl.2010.08.003
dc.identifier.issn0093-934X
dc.identifier.issn1090-2155
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/11291
dc.language.isoeng
dc.peerreviewedyes
dc.publisherAcademic Press Inc Elsevier Science
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subjectSimple recurrent networks
dc.subjectTime analog computations
dc.subjectInferior frontal-cortex
dc.subjectSentence comprehension
dc.subjectWorking-memory
dc.subjectBrocas Area
dc.subjectFunctional localization
dc.subjectDynamical-systems
dc.subjectLanguage Faculty
dc.subjectBrain
dc.titleWhat artificial grammar learning reveals about the neurobiology of syntax
dc.typejournal article
dspace.entity.typePublication
oaire.citation.endPage95
oaire.citation.issue2
oaire.citation.startPage83
oaire.citation.titleBrain and Language
oaire.citation.volume120
person.familyNamePetersson
person.givenNameKarl Magnus
person.identifier13089
person.identifier.ciencia-id6D14-B1D1-1532
person.identifier.orcid0000-0002-8245-0392
person.identifier.ridE-8188-2012
person.identifier.scopus-author-id7006470225
rcaap.rightsopenAccess
rcaap.typearticle
relation.isAuthorOfPublication0f437ab3-c630-40ad-963f-13196ad4fbd6
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery0f437ab3-c630-40ad-963f-13196ad4fbd6

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